Venezuela breaks ties with US-allied Colombia

By FABIOLA SANCHEZ, Associated Press Writer
| 10:37 p.m.July 22, 2010

Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez looks on during a welcoming for Abkhazia's President Sergei Bagapsh and South Ossetia's President Eduard Kokoity at Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, July 23, 2010. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)
— AP

Venezuela's President Hugo Chavez looks on during a welcoming for Abkhazia's President Sergei Bagapsh and South Ossetia's President Eduard Kokoity at Miraflores presidential palace in Caracas, Venezuela, Friday, July 23, 2010. (AP Photo/Fernando Llano)
/ AP

CARACAS, Venezuela 
Venezuela's defense minister on Friday warned Colombia against provoking a conflict after President Hugo Chavez severed ties with the neighboring country and placed his military on alert.

Despite the tensions, cars and pedestrians moved between the countries as usual at border crossings Friday, officials on both sides said. Venezuelan Vice President Elias Jaua called the situation on the border normal.

The diplomatic dispute over the presence of Colombian rebels in Venezuela has worsened just as Colombian President Alvaro Uribe prepares to leave office.

The conservative Uribe has frequently feuded with Venezuela's socialist leader, and Colombian officials have long complained, mostly in private, that Chavez has harbored leaders of its two main rebel groups.

President-elect Juan Manuel Santos, however, has stressed the importance of mending trade relations with Venezuela that overwhelmingly benefit Colombia's food producers. And Chavez has raised the possibility that relations could be restored under Santos.

Trade between Venezuela and Colombia has fallen 70 percent since Chavez froze relations a year ago in response to Colombia's decision to grant the U.S. military expanded access to its military bases. The scaled-back relations have also hurt Venezuelan consumers, as sporadic shortages of items like beef - once imported from Colombia - have worsened.

At a meeting of the Organization of American States in Washington on Thursday, Colombian Ambassador Luis Alfonso Hoyos presented photos, videos, witness testimony and maps of what he said were rebel camps inside Venezuela and challenged Venezuelan officials to let independent observers visit them.

He said roughly 1,500 rebels are hiding in Venezuela and he displayed aerial photographs of what he identified as rebel camps inside Venezuela. He also showed photos and video of rebel leaders that he said were taken at the camps by guerrillas who recently surrendered to the government.

Chavez suggested Uribe could be attempting to provoke a war, and he insisted Venezuela does everything possible to prevent members of the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia and the smaller National Liberation Army from crossing into Venezuelan territory.

Venezuelan Foreign Minister Nicolas Maduro announced Thursday that Chavez's government had closed its embassy in Bogota and demanded that Colombia's ambassador in Caracas leave the country within 72 hours.

Chavez's envoy to the OAS, Roy Chaderton, said the photographs that Hoyos showed didn't provide any solid evidence of a guerrilla presence in Venezuela.

Chavez suggested the photographs could be bogus, saying Uribe "is capable of anything."

The Venezuelan leader contended Uribe could seek to spur an armed conflict with Venezuela before he leaves office next month. His successor, Santos, declined to comment.

Chavez has argued in the past that U.S. officials are using Colombia to portray him as a supporter of terrorist groups to justify U.S. military intervention in Venezuela.

U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon expressed hope the two countries will work out their differences in a peaceful manner.

In Washington, U.S. State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley called the dispute unfortunate and said it was a "petulant response by Venezuela to cut off relations with Colombia."